Middle East Between the Wars

Mandates & Middle East
Between the Wars
Mandate System
• Paris Peace Conference determined that Sykes-Picot would be
the determining definition of the post war mandates carried
out by the League of Nations
– Mandate was intended to transfer power from the former state
(Ottoman) to one of the victorious allies
– France would oversee Lebanon and Syria on behalf of League of
Nations
– Britain, Palestine and Mesopotamia (Iraq)
• In testimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations a former US State Department official who had
been a member of the American Commission at Paris,
testified that the Britain and France had simply gone ahead
and arranged the world to suit themselves.
• League of Nations could do nothing to alter their
arrangements, since the League could only act by unanimous
consent of its members - including the UK and France.
Problems with the Mandate
• Britain and France encountered two difficulties
with the Sykes-Picot boundaries:
1. previous concessions for oil rich Mosul region were
not considered and this raised conflicts
2. League of Nations resolved that Britain should
honor the Balfour Declaration but no provision for
the Zionists was made with Sykes-Picot
• Following World War I, King Faysal moved into
Damascus and set up an Arab state in Syria on
October 1, 1918.
“Discovery” of Middle East Oil
• Following 1892 when archeology professor
Jacques de Morgan discovered oil in ancient Susa
of Western Iran, a flurry of oil prospectors came
looking for oil in Middle East
• Since ancient times, oil was known in the region of
eastern Iraq to bubble up from the ground.
• before and during World War I, the potential of
petroleum products for fuels was realized to be
superior to that of coal. The major powers sought
global sources of new resource.
• British established exclusive oil rights (concession)
in western Iran 1908 with Anglo-Persian Oil Co.
Mosul Oil
• Other countries scrambled to Sultan Abdul Hamid II in
1904-1912 to establish concessions for oil known to be
present in commercial proportions around Mosul
• In order to shut out the competition, the British, Dutch
and Germans formed the Turkish Petroleum Company in
1912 (British held 50%, Dutch and Germans 25% each)
– American prospectors under the Chester Group were excluded
along with the French.
• Chester group still got a foot
in door by securing a
concession to construct
railroads in Ottoman Mosul
• Sykes-Picot did not take oil
into consideration
San Remo Agreement
• British faced the awkward position of having controlling oil
rights in a region belonging to French
• this, coupled with their desire to convince the French to agree
to accommodate the Zionists, forced the British to settle
these issues with another conference in San Remo April 24,
1920
• in exchange for acquisition of the 25% share formerly held
by the Germans, French agreed to change the mandate
boundaries so that British controlled the Mosul region
• In addition, Britain was to oversee the mandate of Palestine
with the text of Balfour Declaration included and a number of
points which Zionists presented:
– establishment of Jewish Agency by Zionists to administer the
Jewish state within the British mandate
• Again, plans to establish and Arab state were simply not
mentioned
New Nations Are Formed
• The mandates carved out of the Ottoman
Empire new national boundaries and states
that largely remain unchanged to this day:
– Syria (under French)
– Lebanon (under French)
– Iraq (under Britain)
– Transjordan (later Jordan) (under the British)
– Palestine (later become Israel except Gaza)
– Kuwait (under British) separate from Iraq
Faysal and French
• Arab leaders had pinned their hopes on King-Crane
Commission which recommended that
1. Britain be given mandate to south (Iraq)
2. US mandate of Syria (undivided and including Lebanon
and Palestine)
3. Faysal be made constitutional monarch of Syria
4. Zionists be allowed to become Syrian citizens, not
independent state
– furthermore, the Commission correctly predicted war if
Syria were given to the French
• These hopes were dashed when Brit/Fr chose to
ignore the US report and French troops replaced
British occupying forces in Lebanon & Syria in 1919.
Syria’s Short-Lived Independence
• The Syrian Congress let by Fatat Society, announced
independence on March 20, 1920 and appointed
Faysal as ruling monarch
• British & French were preoccupied w/ San Remo
meanwhile, French and Syrian forces prepared for
war. France’s high commissioner in Syria, General
Gouraud issued an ultimatum to the Syrians:
– immediate acceptance of French mandate
– reduction of Syrian army and abolition of conscription
– punishment of all those in rebellion
• Syrians were in no position to fight superior French
forces, but in gallant act of defiance, Syrian Congress
voted unanimously to reject the ultimatum
Battle of Maysalun
• French forces, consisting of Africans, Algerians,
Moroccans and Senegalese converged on
Damascus.
• A battle occurred at Maysalun on July 24, 1920
lasted half a day and Syrians were defeated.
• victorious French forces entered Damascus forcing
Faysal to flee after only 22 months of reign
French Mandate of Syria-Lebanon
• As predicted, French rule in Syria was sure recipe
for war, igniting bitter resentment in Syrians
• French were harsh, condescending and
paternalistic, wishing to “bestow the blessings of
French culture on non-western world”
• To make matters worse, contrary to Syrian wishes to
keep the Levant intact, Gouraud adopted a “divide
and conquer” policy, separating Lebanon, Latakia,
Aleppo, Damascus and Jabal Druze into districts
– Druze were 11th century sect of Islam that were crucial in
helping Mamluks drive off Crusaders
French Mandate
• Henry Gouraud established a pattern of
favoritism toward Catholic Maronites in
Lebanon and sought to propagate
Catholicism through Syria
– subsequent high commissioners would
continue this policy
– discouraged influence of Islamic ulama
• Syrians were never able to adjust to the
separation imposed by the French
• Syria would be subject to wars and
violence constantly for next 26 years
French Mandate
• First Revolt occurred in 1925 after the high commissioner
invited Druze leaders to a banquet and then arrested them
– Druze chieftain Sultan al-Atrash who had not attended the
banquet attacked the French garrison in Jabal Druze
– this was a signal for Syrian uprisings in Damascus, Homs, Hama
and other cities.
– the French moved in with armor and planes but the insurgency
dragged on until 1927
• Finally the military high commissioner was replaced by a
civilian who entered into negotiations with Syrian leaders
– the Nationalist Block party (al-Kutla al-Wataniyya) demanded
autonomy of a united Syria of all districts except Lebanon
– over the next eight years the Syrian nationalists and the French
haggled over the form of government, constitution and degree of
independence the future Syria would have
Sultan al-Atrash
• Good friend of Faysal, fought with him during
the Arab Revolt and helped him take Damascus
in 1918
• Al-Atrash won several battles against the
French at the beginning of revolution in 1925,
• Al-Atrash is known for his secularism when he
raised the slogan "Religion is for God, the
fatherland is for all"
• France sent thousands of troops to Syria and
Lebanon from Morocco and Senegal, equipped
with modern weapons, compared to the few
supplies of the rebels. This dramatically altered
the results and allowed the French to regain
many cities, although resistance lasted until the
spring of 1927
• The French sentenced Sultan al-Atrash to
death, but he had escaped with the rebels to
Transjordan and was eventually pardoned.
• He returned to Syria in 1937 after the signing of
the Franco-Syrian Treaty. He was met with a
huge public reception.
Druze warriors 1925
Atrash leading Druze
forces during Syrian
revolt
French Mandate
• Under pressure by the rise of Hitler and the
incursion of Mussolini into Ethiopia, the French felt
compelled to accommodate the Syrians
• In September 9, 1936, a treaty was signed granting
the Syrians some form of independence
– the nationalists won the elections
– chose Hashim al-Atassi as President
– Jamil Mardam as first Prime Minister
• Unfortunately, World War II ended the short-lived
Syrian independence
French Mandate
• The situation in Lebanon was different and relatively
peaceful for a number of reasons:
– population was much more diverse included a substantial
number of Catholics and other Christians
– politics were not as volatile
– while Syria revolted in 1925, Lebanon was granted partial
independence (but not sovereignty) in 1926
– Lebanese established a republic and elected Charles Dabbas
as the first president.
• After a short time, the French revoked the constitution
and struck the independence
• Finally, in 1936, the French restored the constitution of
1926 although they retained a lot of secret controls
over their mandate. World War II would end all of that.
British Mandate Absorbs Faysal
• British were quite different from their French
counterparts.
– British officers served side by side with Arab officers in the
Arab Revolt of WWI and were much more empathetic
– political parties in Iraq in 1920’s did not have as extreme
nationalistic feelings as the Syrians
• the first dilemma occurred when French ousted Faysal
from Syria.
– British felt a sense of obligation to Hashimite family and while
Faysal was monarch in Syria, his brother Abdullah was
appointed Emirate of Transjordan under British mandate
– in 1920 when Faysal, was expelled by the French, the British
had “two kings” on their hands
– sensing Faysal was the more popular of the two brothers, the
British appointed Faysal the Emirate of Iraq
Faysal and Abdullah
British Mandate
• Despite Britain's desire to be more accommodating
to the Arabs due to a sense of obligation in wake of
failed Husayn-McMahon, the mandate in Iraq had
rough beginnings:
– administration of mandate was handled by the
government of India (“Anglo-Indians”) who behaved as if
they might annex Iraq
– British high commissioner surveyed Iraqis and was
surprised to learn that they “preferred” British to Indians
– nationalist movements in Turkey (Kemalists), Egypt and
Syria began to sway nationalistic feelings in Iraq
– results of San Remo was unpopular among Arabs
Iraqi Revolt
• announcement of San Remo and attitude of Anglo-Indians precipitated
revolt in July 1920, led by embittered former officers under Ottomans
• British countered by sending 65,000 troops and after considerable fighting,
London took control and Sir Percy Cox became the new High Commissioner
• Cox collaborated with former Ottoman officials
and tribal, sectarian, and religious leaders and
oversaw the creation of a largely Arab provisional
government. Council members were culled from
local elites whom Cox felt could be relied upon to
support the British agenda.
• The satisfactory functioning of this interim
government allowed Cox to attend the Cairo
Conference, convened by the new Colonial
Secretary Winston Churchill in 1921
Revolt in Iraq
•
The start of the revolution in May 1920 was centered on peaceful protests against British
rule.
– There were large gatherings at Sunni and Shi’a mosques which gave proof of co-operation between the
two main sects of Iraqi society.
– At one of the larger meetings fifteen representatives were nominated to present the case for Iraqi
independence to the British officials.
– Acting Civil Commissioner, Sir Arnold Wilson, dismissed their demands as unpractical.
•
•
•
Armed revolt broke out in late June 1920. Ayatollah al-Shirazi issued another fatwa that
seemed to encourage armed revolt.
The British authorities hoped to avoid this and they arrested a sheikh of the Zawalim tribe.
but an armed band of loyal tribal warriors stormed the prison and set him free.
The revolt soon gained momentum as the British garrisons in the mid-Euphrates region were
weak and the armed tribes much stronger.
– By late July, the armed tribal rebels controlled most of the mid-Euphrates region.
– The success of the tribes caused the revolt to spread to the lower Euphrates and all around Baghdad too.
– British War Minister, Winston Churchill, authorized immediate reinforcements from Iran that included two
squadrons of the Royal Air Force. The use of aircraft shifted the advantage to the British and played a huge
role in ending the revolt.
– There were also tribes that worked against the revolt since they were recognized by the British authorities
and profited from this acknowledgement. Eventually the rebels began to run low on supplies and funding
and could not support the revolt for much longer while British forces were becoming more effective. The
revolt ended in October 1920 when the rebels surrendered Najaf and Karbala to the British
– Around 6,000 Iraqis and around 500 British and Indian soldiers died in the revolt. The revolt caused British
officials to drastically reconsider their strategy in Iraq.
Cairo Conference 1921
• The new Colonial Secretary, Winston Churchill, decided a new colonial
administration was need in Iraq as well as the British colonies in the Middle
East so he called for a large conference in Cairo.
• In March 1921 at the Cairo Conference, British officials discussed the future
of Iraq.
– The British now wanted to control Iraq through more indirect means, mainly by
installing former officials friendly to the British government.
• They eventually decided to install Faysal ibn Husayn as King of Iraq.
– Faysal had worked with the British before in the Arab Revolt during World War I
and he enjoyed good relations with certain important officials.
– British officials also thought installing Faysal as king would prevent Faysal from
fighting the French in Syria and damaging British-French relations.
• For Iraqis the revolt served as part of the founding of Iraqi nationalism
although this conclusion is debated by scholars.
– It also showed unprecedented co-operation between Sunni and Shi’a Muslims
– this co-operation did not last much longer than the end of the revolt.[
Cairo Conference 1920
• Cox saw to it that leaders in Iraq extended an
invitation to Faysal to be their king.
• Abdullah in meantime was made Emirate of
Transjordan
• Cox also began the process of working with
Faysal and Iraqi leaders to form an independent
Arab state
• Faysal was astute politician and managed to walk
a treacherous line between Syrian nationalist
extremists on one hand and complete
subservience to the British on the other.
Iraq Becomes the First Independent
Arab State
• After an eight year struggle in which Arab nationalists
demanded more than what British imperialists were
willing to give, a treaty was signed in 1930.
• In exchange for independence, Iraq agreed to give
Britain base rights at Basra (naval) and Habbaniya
(airfield) and in time of war, Iraq agreed to put its
resources in the hands of the British
• in 1932, both Britain and Iraq ratified the treaty and
the British mandate officially came to an end.
• Unfortunately, this happy outcome would only be
short-lived, because Faysal’s stabilizing influence in
Iraq would end with his death in 1933.
Divisions in Iraq
• There were differences in opinion as to whether Iraq
was really independent or not:
– those in favor of the alliance with Britain included the
National Party, the Progressive Party, the old Ahd Party of
pre-mandate days under Gen. Nuri al-Sa’id
– those opposed were National Brotherhood, Ikha al-Watani
Party led by Yasin al-Hashimi & Rashid al-Gailani
• Even though the vast majority of Iraq’s 5 million people
were Muslims, they belonged to three hostile camps:
Sunni, Shi’i and Kurdish
– the Sunni minority ruled the Shi’i majority
– there were Kurds and Assyrian Christians in the mountains
Faysal Struggles to Keep Things
Together
• despite these challenges, Faysal wanted to transform
the varied religious and ethnic groups into a nation.
– he tried to reconcile Sunnis and Shi’is
– open new schools, promote industry, solve land issues
– he worked to bring about a coalition government with Yasin
al-Hashimi as prime minister
• National Brotherhood Party dominated parliament
from 1932-1936
• When Faysal died in 1933, his son Ghazi was not strong
enough to keep the Brotherhood and the dictatorial
Hashimi in check
General Sidqi Stages First Coup
• In 1936, during the reign of Faisal's ineffectual son
King Ghazi I,
• Sidqi, then acting commander of the Iraqi Army,
staged what was probably the first modern military
coup d'état in the Arab world against the government
of Yasin al-Hashimi.
– he assassinated popular defense minister Jafar al-Askari
who dared to oppose him, a move which embittered many
in the army against him
• Eleven Iraqi military planes dropped leaflets over
Baghdad on October 29, 1936 requesting the King for
the dismissal of al-Hashimi’s administration and for
the installment of the ousted anti-reform Prime
Minister Hikmat Sulayman.
Iraqi Political Controversies
• This began jockeying for power that would plague Iraqi
politics
– Sadqi would last one year and then be assassinated in
another coup d’etat, then there would be a third as army
leaders turned against one another
– General Nuri al-Sa’id held on to the reins when WWII started
– King Ghazi was killed in a car crash in 1939 (many allege was
no accident)
• Kuwait was the oil-rich British protectorate which Iraq
claimed but was denied sovereignty
• There was the controversy of Iraqi nationalism vs larger
pan-Arab nationalism
Mandate of Transjordan
• mostly desert expanse with some 200,000
inhabitants, mostly Bedouins, Transjordan
continues to this day under the descendents of the
Hashemite Emir Abdullah al-Husayn
• This Emirate remained loyal to Britain until after
World War II
– in return the British organized one of the best trained
and equipped armies in the Fertile Crescent
– Arab Legion under Glubb Pasha (Sir John Glubb)
Glubb Pasha
• Glubb served his home country all through his years in
the Middle East, making him immensely unpopular in
the end.
• Arab nationalists believed that he had been the force
behind pressure that made King Hussein I of Jordan join
the Baghdad Pact. Glubb served different high positions
in the Arab Legion, the army of Transjordan.
• During World War II he led attacks on Arab leaders in
Iraq, as well as the Vichy regime which was present in
Lebanon and Syria.
• During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War the Arab legion was
considered the strongest Arab army involved in the war.
Glubb led the Arab Legion across Jordan to occupy the
West Bank.
Transjordan
• the government was simple:
– the administrative and legislative powers were
vested in the Emir, who like a paternal benefactor,
ruled the country with an executive council to assist
him
– Membership in legislative council proportional
representation depending on the size of the Bedouin
or other ethnic groups in a certain area
• British citizens in Transjordan supervised the
administration and controlled the budget, the
army, and foreign affairs
Abdullah’s Ambition
• After his brother Faysal’s death in 1933, Abdullah
assumed role as head of Hashemites
• He desired for unity among Arabs of Fertile
Crescent and supported “The Greater Syria
Movement”
– he envisioned a united Fertile Crescent under rule of
Hashemites as specified in Husayn-McMahon
– Saudi Arabia and Egypt opposed the plan as did all the
nationalistic political parties of Syria and Iraq
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
• The Saud clan in Arabia owed much of its influence to
being allied with a movement started by Muhammad
Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhib, the founder of Wahhibism.
• Wahhib found an ally and protector in the head of the
Saud clan, Muhammad Ibn Saud Ibn Muqrin.
– When Wahhib died, the Saudi leaders carried the torch as both the
spiritual and political heads of Wahhibism.
– Their objective was to stem the tide of foreign domination and influence
and to restore the traditional rule of Islam.
• The Saud family, like other clans on the
Arabian Peninsula, had been torn by
internal strife for more than a century
with endless treachery and feuding. This
constant tension and conflict represents
a general pattern.
Conquest of Arabia
• Ibn Saud faced some challenges, with rival clans such as the
Rashid clan who controlled Riyadh; and outsiders such as the
Turks who controlled the western region known as Hasa and the
Hashemites who controlled the Hijaz along the Red Sea.
• In 1902, ibn Saud, seized Riyadh in Nejd from the Al Rashid – the
first of a series of conquests ultimately leading to the creation of
the modern state of Saudi Arabia in 1932.
• The main weapon for achieving these conquests was the Ikhwan,
the Wahhabist-Bedouin tribal army led by Sultan ibn Bijad and
Faisal Al-Dawish
• Following collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, the
Ikhwan had completed the conquest of the territory that was to
become Saudi Arabia by the end of 1925
– On 10 January 1926 ibn Saud declared himself King of the
– on 27 January 1927 he took the title of King of
• In 1932, the two kingdoms of the Hejaz and Nejd were united as
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Conquest of Arabia
• Though the British had supported Hussein from the start of
the Arab Revolt and the Husayn-McMahon Correspondence,
they elected not to help Hussein repel the Saudi attack,
which eventually took Mecca, Medina, and Jeddah.
• Husayn was then forced to flee to Cyprus where he was
received with great honor by the British and received the
Order of St. Michael
Spurred on by Ikhwan
• By 1934, he consolidated Najd, Hasa, Hijaz and ‘Asir
into the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
– In so doing, he healed rifts within his own family, forced rival
clans into submission, taken Hasa from the Turks and
conquered Mecca and Hijaz.
• One of the major reasons for his success was than Ibn
Saud formed the Ikhwan (Brotherhood) movement in
which he recruited warlike Bedouins into service for
Allah and used them to settle the land they conquered.
– The religious ideology of Ikhwan was a puritan zeal that
helped bind the society fragmented by rivalries together.
– The Ikhwan served as the rallying cause that drove Ibn Saud’s
forces from one military victory after another.
– Ibn Saud had a strong belief that he was fighting for a
spiritual cause and that he was being directed by the will of
Allah.
Downfall of Ikhwan
• After the conquest of the Hejaz, the Ikhwan leaders wanted to
continue the expansion of the Wahhabist realm into the British
protectorates of Transjordan, Iraq and Kuwait
• In August 1924, the Ikhwan militia traveled 1,600 kilometers (990
mi) from Najd to attack Transjordan under British protectorate.
– Just 15 kilometers off Amman, the raiders were spotted by the British
RAF, which in turn attacked the Ikhwan using airplanes. The Ikhwan
army suffered heavy casualties. It is reported that out of the 1500
raiders, only 100 escaped
– ibn Saud, however, refused to agree to thes raids, recognizing the
danger of a direct conflict with the British. The Ikhwan , accused ibn
Saud of failing to adhere to Wahhabism and revolted but were
defeated in the Battle of Sabilla in 1930
– the Ikhwan leadership were massacred.
– They were reorganized into Saudi Arabian National Guard which is the
King’s personal guard
Coming to terms
• Ibn Sa’ud had led the Wahhabis in becoming the new
masters of Arabia raised concerns among the rest of
Islam and neighboring states:
1. Wahabbis were puritan fanatics that considered other
Muslims to be “polytheists” and now controlled access to
the Ka’ba
2. ibn Sa’ud was the arch rival of the Hashemite family,
which the British placed in charge of neighboring
Transjordan and Iraq
• ibn Sa’ud called an Islamic conference in Mecca June
7, 1926 in order to provide other ulama opportunity to
meet with his Wahhabi ulama
– other Muslim delegates were impressed with the wisdom of
the tall monarch
Saudi Government
• After 1934, Ibn Saud spent the next almost twenty years developing an
elaborate patrimonial government.
• The discovery of oil at Jebel Dhahran in 1938 propelled the government to
be one of the richest in the world.
– When Ibn Saud died in 1953, his annual income was close to $275 million.
• Even today, Saudi Arabia represents one of the world’s greatest
patriarchies.
– It is operated as a giant personal household.
– In a system of patrimonial rule, the leader relies very strongly on constant faceto-face contact as a means to control personalities.
– At the heart of the government is the family of the ruler.
– Ibn Saud had an estimated 300 wives and the countless princes are the his
ministers.
– It is estimated there is one prince for every 5,000 people in Saudi Arabia.
– There is purpose in marrying many wives. Ibn Saud often married the widows
and adopted the orphan children of important allies and rivals killed in battle in
order to seal lasting friendly relationships with their families. Through the
years, he married into all the leading families in Arabia including the Wahhabis,
the Rashids, and many others.
Patrimonial Leadership Model
• The Patrimonial leader represents a father figure who always
encourages his children to come to him with their troubles.
• Ibn Saud was famous for his devotion to hearing the
compliments and complaints of all his subjects who came to
him regardless of their social status or position in life.
– When the visitor departed, they always received a gift from the
patriarch and left as well with a deeper loyalty to their benevolent
king.
• Under his guidance, Saudi Arabia achieved order and
tranquility rather than internal strife and foreign domination.
• On the downside, with a patrimonial system, sudden and
great wealth seldom lead to reform and modernization.
– These resources become clogged in the pockets of the patrimonial
family.
– The result is Rolls Royces and 25-million dollar palaces alongside
abject poverty and illiteracy.
Saudi Oil
• From WWI it was learned that oil would be
necessary to win future wars
• First, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company was
established, prospectors claimed there was no oil
in Saudi Arabia except in eastern seaboard of alHasa
• After the depression hit, the number of
pilgrimages per year fell from 100,000 to below
40,000. This hurt their economy greatly and they
needed to find alternate sources of income. This
caused the King to get serious about the search
for oil